Last week, Councilman and Condo King Allan Domb went public with a proposal to double the city’s controversial tax abatement from 10 to 20 years for properties worth less than $250,000. Domb points out that developers have not invested in neighborhoods in North Philly, West Philly and Southwest Philly the way they have in Greater Center City, and he thinks his legislation will change that.

Whether or not you agree with his proposed solution, it’s undeniable that the problem he identified needs to be fixed. Many Philadelphians are worried — rightly — that they will miss out on the massive growth of Greater Center City. These are residents who are isolated from downtown amenities, as well as those who have been driven out of their former homes by rising housing costs.

But there’s a better way to spur development in outlying neighborhoods than to expand the city’s expensive tax abatement.

Here’s how: The state’s General Assembly should pass Senate Bill 385. It wouldn’t even threaten the school district’s budget the way Domb’s proposal could.

I’ll explain how the bill would work in a second. But first, a history lesson: In 2004, the state legislature sought to support transit-oriented development by passing legislation that allowed SEPTA and the city to forge a partnership that could float bonds in order to help pay for upgrades at transportation stations — and then letting the pair pay back the bonds with the additional real estate taxes that are generated by any improvements made.

These enhancements can include new lights, rehabbed sidewalks and even environmental remediation work. The idea is that by making a train station more accessible or cleaning up a dirty site, a developer will be more apt to build there.

Senate Bill 385 is an update to this law, and it does two things that would be particularly good for Philadelphia.

The new legislation would make it possible for SEPTA and the city to repay the bonds using the increase in liquor, sales and use, personal income, corporate net income and other taxes that are generated by the fixed-up infrastructure, instead of just property taxes. This means you don’t have to divert any money that would otherwise go to the school district — something that could prevent SEPTA and the city from taking advantage of the current law.

The bill would also let SEPTA and the city use these funds to finance planning for construction projects. In today’s environment, the projects most likely to succeed are those that are “shovel-ready,” but you can’t be shovel-ready if you don’t have the money to do planning and design.

There’s a hitch. This bill is something of a pilot: It would only allow entities such as SEPTA and the city to repay bonds using the tax revenue hikes in two separate developments in the entire state. Hopefully, though, legislators would expand the program once it proved successful.

And if that happened, it could make a real impact on blight and poverty. More than 6,000 — or 60 percent — of the city’s 10,000 publicly owned vacant properties are located within a quarter-mile of rail transit. And given that transportation costs eat up to one-third of the incomes of poor Philadelphians, largely because of car-related payments, it is imperative that we figure out how to make it easier to build dense, mixed-income housing that is accessible by transit. Plus, neighborhoods that had numerous transit options grew far faster between 2000 and 2010 than those that didn’t, according to the Census.

In recent years, a few nonprofits have built impressive transit-oriented developments. Asociación Puertorriqueños en Marcha, a community development corporation in North Philly, opened Paseo Verde in 2013. It’s a modern, green, mixed-income, mixed-use gem, which backs up on to the Regional Rail tracks at Temple University Station.

With Senate Bill 385 (and hopefully expanded legislation later on), we could build more Paseo Verdes — in North Philly, West Philly, Germantown and beyond. In so doing, we’d be continuing the city’s legacy of transit-oriented development: Many of the city’s neighborhoods originally sprouted up along its trolley and rail lines built in the 19th century, like kudzu on a trellis.

Ariel Ben-Amos is a lecturer in the Urban Studies Program at the University of Pennsylvania.

Around the Web

Be respectful of our online community and contribute to an engaging conversation. We reserve the right to ban impersonators and remove comments that contain personal attacks, threats, or profanity, or are flat-out offensive. By posting here, you are permitting Philadelphia magazine and Metro Corp. to edit and republish your comment in all media.